An Adventure, Bush Theatre review - epic but flawed

★★★ AN ADVENTURE, BUSH THEATRE Deeply felt show about love, marriage and migration

Deeply felt show about love, marriage and migration doesn’t quite work

Director Madani Younis, who since 2011 has transformed the Bush Theatre in West London into one of London's most outstanding Off-West End venues, is leaving in December, on his way to becoming the creative director of the Southbank Centre.

Misty, Bush Theatre review - powerful meditation on how we tell stories

★★★★ MISTY, BUSH THEATRE Powerful meditation on how we tell stories

Arinzé Kene writes and stars in a witty, hard-hitting play about race and culture in modern London

Arinzé Kene is having a bit of a moment. He won an Evening Standard Film Award for The Pass opposite Russell Tovey in 2016, is about to appear in a BBC drama with Paddy Considine, and has just finished lending his lovely tenor to Conor McPherson’s Girl from the North Country in the West End.

The B*easts, Bush Theatre review - Monica Dolan is almost flawless

★★★★ THE B*EASTS, BUSH THEATRE Monica Dolan is almost flawless in monologue about women's bodies

Hectic monologue from smoking, drinking, fast-talking psychotherapist about women's bodies

Lila had breast implants at the age of eight. Karen, her mother, is required to take psychotherapy sessions on account of the fact that she arranged for the operation. Tessa (played by Monica Dolan, pictured top and below) is a psychotherapist who is treating Karen.

The Believers Are But Brothers, Bush Theatre review - a gimmick in search of a story

★★★ THE BELIEVERS ARE BUT BROTHERS, BUSH THEATRE One-man show about political extremism on the internet occasionally disturbs

One-man show about political extremism on the internet occasionally disturbs

Do boys never leave the playground? Just when I was reasonably sure that the crisis of masculinity was an old-fashioned trope – I mean, so very 1990s – along comes a one-man show that investigates how lonely young men, seething with resentment, surf the internet, attracted like flies to shit by tech-savvy extremist groups of both secular and religious persuasions. And boy are they persuasive!

Parliament Square, Bush Theatre, review – uncomfortable blaze of anger

New drama about political extremism is brilliantly written – mostly

The political story of our time is the upsurge in support for Jeremy Corbyn, leftwing leader of the Labour Party, mainly by young activists who are both idealistic and energetic. But what would happen if one of them decided to go freelance, and pushed their protest beyond the bounds of reason? James Fritz’s resonant and beautifully structured play explores this kind of question.

Heather, Bush Theatre review - Harry Potter satire burns bright

★★★ HEATHER, BUSH THEATRE Thomas Eccleshare's Harry Potter satire burns bright

New play about storytelling examines a children’s book craze - and its repercussions

Harry Potter has a lot to answer for. The phenomenal success of JK Rowling’s books, and of their film versions, and of the stage play (now set to remain in the West End for all eternity), has created a template of extravagant cultural impact that must still be bewitching prospective authors of the next big thing, as well as their prospective publishers and prospective readers.

Of Kith and Kin, Bush Theatre, review - comic but confused gay surrogacy drama

★★★ OF KITH AND KIN, BUSH THEATRE New play about gay parenthood suffers from an identity crisis

New play about gay parenthood suffers from an identity crisis

A new baby is like an alien invasion: it blows your mind and it colonises your world. For any couple, parenthood can be both exalting and devastating, with the stress hugging the relationship so tightly that eventually all its lies pop out.

Ramona Tells Jim, Bush Theatre, review – kooky, teenage heartbreak

★★★ RAMONA TELLS JIM, BUSH THEATRE Heartwarming new play about young love is good fun, if a bit slender

Heartwarming new play about young love is good fun, if a bit slender

Location, location, location. Jim thinks he lives in the “shittiest” small town in Scotland. It’s Mallaig, on the west coast, and he’s a deeply troubled 32-year-old, working for a fish merchant and as a nature guide, but having no friends. His flat is tiny and messy, and it smells bad. Still, he enjoys his own company, and has a great collection of crustaceans in formaldehyde. It’s his hobby.

Hir, Bush Theatre review – transgender home is sub-prime

★★★ HIR, BUSH THEATRE New American satire about families only occasionally hits the mark

New American satire about families only occasionally hits the mark

Donald Trump’s electoral success was, we have been told, fuelled by the anger of the American working class. But how do you show that kind of anger on stage, and how do you criticise its basis in traditional masculinity?

Guards at the Taj, Bush Theatre review - ‘powerful but ethically troubling’

★★★ GUARDS AT THE TAJ, BUSH THEATRE New writing venue reopens with a play about another architectural marvel

New writing venue reopens with a play about another architectural marvel

The Bush is back! After a whole year of darkness, the West London new writing venue has reopened its doors following a £4.3million remodelling and refurb, a project close to the heart of its artistic director Madani Younis.